Gomes, Jefferson lead Timberwolves past Bulls

Gomes scored 25 points and grabbed 10 rebounds as the
Timberwolves posted an 83-67 victory over the Chicago Bulls on
Wednesday in the finale of a home-and-home series.

Al Jefferson had 26 points and 20 rebounds and Sebastian Telfair
handed out 10 assists for Minnesota, which has won three
straight at home after beginning the season 4-14 at the Target
Center.

"I think we're being more aggressive now," Gomes said.
"Everyone's contributing. When coach (Randy Wittman) calls your
number, you have to be ready to play whether you're starting or
coming off the bench."

The Timberwolves, who have won three straight and nine of 10
here vs. the Bulls, won this contest despite a horrific first
quarter.

Minnesota scored just eight points in the opening period to tie
the dubious first-quarter club record of just eight points
accrued against the Toronto Raptors on March 24, 2006.

"It wasn't pretty, but we'll take an ugly win over a pretty
defeat any day," Wittman said.

It could have been worse for the Timberwolves, but the Bulls
only put up 14 points before the start of the second period.

"We just didn't make any shots," Bulls guard Kirk Hinrich said.
"We tried to make a run and really dig in defensively, and they
started getting offensive rebounds, and Jefferson started going
a little bit. It just wasn't NBA basketball out there for us
tonight."

An 8-0 run to begin the second quarter actually gave Minnesota a
16-14 advantage just 68 seconds into the period.

Gomes, who connected on 10-of-20 from the floor, scored 10 in
the second to keep the Timberwolves close, 34-33, at halftime.
He then put up an additional 10 in the third as Minnesota took a
63-54 advantage into the final quarter.

"Basically, they had two guys that dominated the game," Bulls
interim coach Jim Boylan said. "Jefferson had 19 (points) and
eight (rebounds) in the second half and Gomes was solid
throughout the game.

"We held those two guys in check (Tuesday) and we didn't get
that done (Wednesday)."

Jefferson, who shot 12-of-24, added eight in the third for the
Timberwolves and collected his third 20-point, 20-rebound game
of the campaign.

It was a much better performance by Jefferson against Chicago
center Ben Wallace, who held him to 20 points, including 15
until the final minutes in a 96-85 victory by the Bulls on
Tuesday.

"I thought Ben played him (Jefferson) pretty well in the first
half," Boylan said. "He held him pretty well in check. But it
is a lot of pressure on Ben to shut him down completely. Quite
honestly, our help defense was terrible in the second half. If
you don't help on a guy like (Jefferson), he's going to score."

Minnesota, which shot jut 37 percent (34-of-93), produced its
largest margin of victory in any game this season.

"I think we're learning how to play with each other a little bit
more than in the beginning of the season," Gomes said. "We
know that Al is going to get the ball a lot and we have to
figure out how to create spacing that will give him
opportunities. If they do double-team, we have to get in a open
spot for him to see us."

Hinrich and Thabo Sefolosha each had 14 points for Chicago,
which shot a miserable 33 percent (23-of-69) and produced its
lowest point total of the season.

"We found it really difficult to find any sort of offense out
there," Boylan said. "You scratch your head sometimes. Our
ball-handling was really poor and turnovers hurt us.

"When you play back-to-back games against the same team, there's
a certain mental approach to the game that is necessary, and we
didn't bring that tonight."

The Bulls continued to play without leading scorers Ben Gordon
(wrist) and Luol Deng (Achilles tendinitis), as well as starting
power forward Joe Smith (flu).